The Scotsman

Dozens killed across India as monsoon rains cause chaos

- By RAFIQ MAQBOOL in Mumbai newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Heavy monsoon rains in western India have caused at least three walls to collapse on to huts and city shanties, killing at least 30 people and injuring dozens of others, officials said.

At least 21 people were killed and more than 60 injured when a 35ft wall demarcatin­g an urban forest collapsed during the night in Mumbai, police said.

Rescue teams with sniffer dogs were searching the area afterwards, and crews from the Indian navy fanned out to rescue residents of the waterlogge­d city, India’s financial and entertainm­ent capital.

Nine deaths were caused by two wall collapses elsewhere in Maharashtr­a state.

Six migrant constructi­on workers were killed and five injured when a wall collapsed on their tin-roofed huts in Pune, police said.

In Thane district, a school wall collapsed and fell on to huts, killing three people and injuring one, said Lakshman Pawar, a local civic official.

Mumbai police officer Ravinder Howle said said two men died after they got trapped in a submerged car, raising the overall death toll in the state to 32.

The monsoon season in India brings heavy rain from June to September that causes flooding and other damage. Building collapses are common as the rain weakens the foundation­s of poorly built structures.

On Saturday, another wall collapse in Pune killed 16 people living in a cluster of tinroofed huts housing migrant workers and their families.

Monday’s rain also flooded roads in Mumbai and covered train tracks. According to Skymet, a private weather forecastin­g agency, the rainfall was the city’s heaviest in a decade and the second highest in 44 years.

Rain subsided by midday yesterday but weather officials predicted more heavy downpours in the next three days.

India’s Central Railway said in a tweet that “nature’s fury” made operating trains a “safety hazard” in some areas.

Train services were running only partially yesterday after thousands of passengers were stranded overnight.

Millions of passengers commute daily on the railways in Mumbai.

The city has witnessed incessant rainfall over the past few days and floodwater has entered homes. A public holiday was declared for yesterday and the Maharashtr­a government said only emergency services would be functional.

Maharashtr­a chief minister Devendra Fadnavis tweeted: “People are advised to stay indoors unless there is any emergency.”

TV channels showed videos of submerged cars and water flowing through ground floors of some residentia­l buildings.

A domestic flight skidded off the main runway at Mumbai Airport late on Monday, but flight operations were partially restored yesterday.

 ??  ?? 0 More than a dozen people were killed after heavy rain caused a wall to collapse on to shanties in Mumbai, which saw the heaviest monsoon rainfall for a decade
0 More than a dozen people were killed after heavy rain caused a wall to collapse on to shanties in Mumbai, which saw the heaviest monsoon rainfall for a decade

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